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Transcript
A Further Response to Samuele Bacchiocchi’s Arguments for the Rise of Sunday
Observance in the Second Century Church
By Rodney Nelson
Introduction
Samuele Bacchiocchi’s initial thesis for a post-apostolic and second century
origin for Christian observance of Sunday was presented in his work From Sabbath to
Sunday (1977). Response to the book was widespread. An important critique of his
work was presented by fellow Seventh Day Adventist scholar Kenneth Strand of
Andrews University in Andrews University Seminary Studies entitled, “From Sabbath to
Sunday in the Early Christian Church: A Review of Some Recent Literature; Part II:
Samuele Bacchiocchi’s Reconstruction” (17:1, Spring 1979, pgs. 85-104).
Bacchiocchi had occasion to briefly respond to the criticisms leveled at him from
Strand in his book Divine Rest for Human Restlessness (1981; pgs. 245-250). He
responds to Strand in two key areas: the primacy of the Roman Church in the second
century, and pagan sun worship and the origin of Sunday. Following is a response to
Bacchiocchi’s criticisms of Strand’s work. They will focus on the two areas of Roman
primacy and pagan origins to Christian Sunday observance.
Primacy of the Church of Rome in the Second Century
Bacchiocchi writes:
“The documents available leave no doubt as to the considerable authority and
influence exerted at this time (second century AD) by the Roman Church”
(Divine Rest for Human Restlessness, 245).
He offers support for this statement by citing the following sources from the second
century.
•
The early Church Father Ignatius gives more “honorific epithets” to the
Roman Church than to any other church he addresses at the beginning of his
letters (Divine Rest. . . , 245). Bacchiocchi writes, “The Roman Church,
writes Ignatius, ‘presides in the chief place of the Roman territory. . .’” (245)
The manner in which he introduces the quotation beginning “presides. . .”
conveys a meaning not found when reading directly from Ignatius’ letter.
Rather, the letter states: “Ignatius. . . , to the Church which has obtained
mercy. . . , the Church which is sanctified and enlightened. . . , the Church
which presides in the place of the region of the Romans, and which is worthy
of God. . .” (Ante-Nicene Fathers 1:73).
No where does Ignatius refer to the “Roman Church”, but to the Church that
“presides in the place of the region of the Romans.” The significance here is
that Ignatius was addressing the Church that was located in the territory
surrounding Rome itself, not merely the believers located in the city of Rome.
In other words, his salutation’s emphasis was on the Church, not Rome . It
was a general salutation to believers located in the territory surrounding
Rome, not given in recognition of the authority of the Church in Rome.
Bacchiocchi’s construction of Ignatius’ statement conveys the thought that the
church located in the city of Rome itself “presides in the chief place of the
Roman territory.” However, we have seen that Ignatius merely addresses “the
Church which presides in (not “over”) the place of the region of the Romans.”
•
The phrase of Ignatius, “presiding in (over) love,” signifies that Rome had a
“leading concern for the welfare of other churches” (Divine Rest. . . , 245).
Bacchiocchi cleverly inserts the term “presidency” in the place of “presiding”
to put attention on the authority of the Roman Church as demonstrating a
“leading concern for the welfare of other churches” (245). In other words,
just as the Roman Church carried authoritative weight over other churches in
the Empire, so it demonstrates this authority by being the most loving church
in the Empire.
Bacchiocchi supports this by citing Ignatius’ request that Roman believers
remember in prayer the believers in Syria that had no leadership at that time
due to his absence. Ignatius faithfully states that “Jesus Christ alone will
oversee it, together with your love” (9:1). Bacchiocchi asks, “Is it not
remarkable that Ignatius should entrust his Church of Antioch into the loving
care of the distant and (to him) unknown Church of Rome, rather than to one
of the near and known churches of Asia?” (246).
There is no indication that Ignatius is entrusting anything to the care of the
Roman Church. Indeed, he rests in the assurance that the church in Syria will
be under the care of Jesus alone. Ignatius is requesting prayer for the Syrian
church in his absence, not “entrusting” a church to Roman care. Finally,
Ignatius is not indicating Roman oversight of his church(s) by the reference to
“together with your love” as if it is a co-overseer with the Lord. Rather, he is
seeking additional blessing for a difficult situation by seeking prayer and love
from Roman believers.
What Bacchiocchi has done is to take specific words such as “preside” and
twisted them to carry the meaning of authority or preeminence. Such is not
warranted and demonstrates his attempt to support an early date for Roman
Church authority in the second century.
•
Bacchiocchi cites evidence from the second century Church Father Irenaeus.
He writes, “Irenaeus, Bishop of Lyons, in his book Against Heresies
(composed about 175-189), refutes heretics by appealing to the apostolic
tradition preserved in a special way by the Church of Rome which he
describes as ‘the greatest, the most ancient, and universally known Church
founded and organized by the two most glorious apostles, Peter and Paul. . .
For it is a matter of necessity that every Church should agree with this
Church, on account of its preeminent authority, that is, the faithful
everywhere, inasmuch as the apostolic tradition has been preserved
continuously by those who exist everywhere’” (Divine Rest. . . , 246).
How much of Irenaeus’ statement is hyperbole can be judged to some degree,
as testified by Bacchiocchi himself. The objective of Irenaeus is to support
the doctrine of apostolic succession as the means to refute the heresies of
Marcion and others. His argument is to support the idea that apostolic
succession began in Rome with the founding of the Church there by the
apostles Peter and Paul, and hence coherent doctrine was handed down
through the succession of bishops originally established by the apostles.
Therefore, it is necessary to give homage to Rome as the “home church”
because of its “preeminent authority” due to the establishment of apostolic
succession and doctrine that began in Rome with Peter and Paul.
Bacchiocchi points out at least two inaccuracies of Irenaeus’ statement. First,
the church in Rome was not the most ancient church. Second, Paul did not
establish it. Bacchiocchi makes a key conclusion by pointing out that such
statements “reveal a method that was being developed to justify the
(preeminent authority) exerted by the Church of Rome” (246).
However, despite the admitted inaccuracies of Irenaeus’ account, Bacchiocchi
continues to argue for Roman preeminence over the second century Church.
This argument runs into some problems when analyzed closely.
First, his reference to the Easter-Sunday controversy (Quartodecimanism)
does demonstrate the increasing authority of the Roman Church and the
Roman Bishop (notably Bishop Victor) by the end of the second century.
However, the failure of Bishop Victor to conform the Asian churches to
Rome’s will demonstrates the lack of his preeminence over the universal
Church even by the end of the second century. Furthermore, his decree of
heresy over those who disagreed was a move that illustrated his inability to
conform the Asian churches to an Easter-Sunday observance. The highhanded move on his part illustrates that the authority of the Roman Church or
Bishop was not universally in force. This is demonstrated by the fact that the
controversy was not finally officially ended until the Council of Nicea in 325
AD, at which point it took the authority of the Christian Emperor Constantine
to enforce it. The ecclesiastical authority of the Roman Bishop in the late
second century was not enough to enforce the observance of the Sunday-
Easter throughout the empire, but had to wait until the civil/ecclesiastical
authority of the early fourth century to make it conclusive. Bacchiocchi
attempts to demonstrate the universal jurisdiction of the Roman Bishop by
citing a statement by Jean Colson to the effect that the ruling of
excommunication by Victor not only spoke for the Roman Church, but for all
the churches supporting the Sunday-Easter (Divine Rest. . . , 247). However,
as pointed out by Bacchiocchi’s citation from La Piana, Victor’s declaration
of excommunication for the Quartodeciman supporters was “the beginning of
that historical process which in time led the Roman Church to identify
Christian tradition with its own doctrine and its own organization” (247,
emphasis supplied). I would suggest that Victor’s declarations were the
beginning of that historical process that would lead to total Roman supremacy
in later centuries. “It was under Victor that this process of expansion of
Roman influence began to assume a definite form and to give rise to a
tradition which was destined to play a part of capital importance in the history
of Christianity” (La Piana 252; cited in Divine Rest. . . , 247; emphasis
supplied).
The question begs – Did Rome possess sufficient ecclesiastical authority to
change observances of the entire Christian Church so early in the “process of
expansion of Roman influence”? How could the Roman Church possess
sufficient authority in the early second century to change the Christian weekly
day of worship if the “process of expansion of Roman influence began” near
the end of the second century over the Easter-Sunday? It is concluded that
Bacchiocchi does not submit decisive and confirming evidence to detail such
authority, but his evidence reveals the struggle that the Roman Church
(especially Victor) had in conforming the other churches to the decrees of
Roman ecclesiastical authority.
The controversy over Easter-Sunday was over the timing for the observance
of the resurrection, not the origin of the observance itself. Indeed, while “the
exact time of the origin of Easter-Sunday may be a subject of dispute” (Divine
Rest. . . , 241), the assertion that Rome is the place of its birth is based more
on opinion than documentation. “The scarcity of documents and the
controversial nature of their information make it very difficult to determine
with absolute certainty where, when and by whom Easter-Sunday was first
introduced” (Divine Rest. . . , 239). Nevertheless, he concludes that the “close
nexus existing between Easter-Sunday and weekly Sunday presupposes. . . the
contemporaneous adoption of (weekly) Sunday worship in place of
Sabbathkeeping” (245). This is a statement of opinion, not fact, and this must
not be forgotten.
Second, the growth of Roman ecclesiastical authority underway in the second
century is not the issue. The issue is whether it possessed sufficient authority
to change a weekly or annual day of worship into a universal observance.
Contrary to Bacchiocchi’s conclusions, the “sampling of historical evidences.
. . (does not) indicate that the Church of Rome enjoyed already in the second
century sufficient authority to influence the greater part of Christendom to
accept new customs such as Easter-Sunday and weekly Sunday” (247).
Bacchiocchi enlists the pre-Montanist Tertullian in support for the high
esteem and authority of the Roman Bishop (Divine Rest. . . , 310, footnote
149). However, as admitted by Bacchiocchi, the Montanist Tertullian
“ridicules the claim of the Roman Bishop” (310, footnote 149). Rather than
substantiating the “unusual authority asserted by the Bishop of Rome by the
end of the second century,” Tertullians about- face comments indicates the
subjective nature of evaluating the power and authority of the Roman Bishop.
Which Tertullian was correct? Furthermore, Tertullian possibly confirms the
authority of the Roman Bishop by the end of the second century.
Even if the Roman Church and/or Bishop possessed the authority over the
Christian world to the extent Bacchiocchi asserts, the evidence he cites relates
to the end of the second century more than to the early to mid-second century
(the era he asserts the Sunday change occurred). The usage of later evidence
to prove assertions for an earlier time is at best tenuous and risks
misinterpreting history.
Pagan Sun Worship and the Origin of Sunday
Bacchiocchi believes that the “diffusion of the Sun cults and the consequent
advancement of ‘Sun-day’ from the position of second to that of first day of the week
provide a most plausible explanation” for the adoption of it as the Christian day of
worship (Divine Rest. . . , 248). To establish support for this proposition, Bacchiocchi
goes to great pains to prove that the pagan Sun-day was widespread and important in the
Roman world of the first and second centuries. He does establish that it was prominent in
the early Roman Empire.
In the section discussing this topic (Divine Rest. . . , 248-250), Bacchiocchi
spends most of the time attempting to establish the importance of the pagan Sun-day in
the first and second centuries. Afterward, he asks, “Did the advancement of the day of
the Sun to the position of first day of the week possibly influence Christians who desired
to differentiate themselves from the Sabbath of the Jews, to adopt and adapt this same
day for their weekly worship?” (249). He then gives “several indications” that
“indirectly” prove this occurred.
1. The “frequent condemnation” of the early Fathers of Christians who venerated
the Sun.
2. Using the Sun as a symbol of Christ in early Christian art and literature.
3. The direction of prayer from the Jerusalem to the east.
4. The deve lopment of Christmas.
There is no disputing that early Christians used the Sun as a representation or
symbol of Christ. However, these instances do not refer to or infer that Christians
adopted the pagan day of the Sun to be the new Christian day of worship. Rather, it
demonstrates that early Christians used Sunday as a symbol of already present Christian
realities, theology, and themes, not as originating Christian custom and practice.
Bacchiocchi then cites evidence he believes directly indicates that the pagan
Sunday influenced Christians to adopt it as the Christian day of worship.
•
He refers to Justin Martyr’s account of a Christian assembly where he
mentions the “day of the Sun.” Such a reference gives no proof of Christian
adoption of a pagan day for Christian usage. Rather, it refers to the pagan
“day of the Sun” as a common reference point between Justin’s pagan readers
and Christian custom. The common reference point is not to demonstrate a
cause-effect relationship between pagan and Christian practice, but to
apologetically explain Christian custom, such as assemblage on the first day
of the week. The connection between Justin’s reference to “the day of the Sun
and the creation of light on the first day” is clearly not coincidental, as
Bacchiocchi points out. However, the connection is not for the reasons he
believes. The connection is not to admit a pagan origin for a Christian
custom, but is meant to explain the reason for the Christian custom, namely,
the creation of light on the first day.
•
Bacchiocchi’s reference to Eusebius again does not demonstrate what he seeks
to prove. Eusebius appropriates Sun symbology to explain that the first day of
the week is the “true day of the sun” because on it God created light. Jesus is
therefore the “Sun of Justice.” Such references and analogies do not mean the
day of Christian worship is a borrowed pagan day of worship cloaked in
Christian terminology and theology. Rather, the Christian day of worship is
referred to as the “true day of the sun” when God created light on the first
day. In effect, Eusebius is evidence for the exact opposite of what
Bacchiocchi seeks to prove.
Bacchiocchi discusses the change of the pagan day of the Sun from the second to
the first day of the week by attempting to demonstrate the prominence of Mithraism in
the early Empire (Divine Rest. . . , 311; footnote 167). However, such a factor does not
mean that Christians changed the day of worship under the influence of pagan factors.
By the late first century Mithraism was gaining ground in the Empire, but the influence of
Mithraism on pagan Rome is far different than arguing for its influence on Christianity.
This latter point is one Bacchiocchi offers no proof in support.
Bacchiocchi debates three points given against his thesis by fellow Seventh Day
Adventist scholar Kenneth Strand (311, footnote 167). Following are Strand’s points
with Bacchiocchi’s responses.
•
Strand does not support a pagan influence on the Christian Sunday because
Mithraism was primarily a religion followed by men in the Roman military.
Therefore, its scope of influence was too narrow to influence the fledgling
movement of Christianity. Bacchiocchi responds by pointing out that
Mithraism was “more widespread and influential than earlier thought” (Divine
Rest. . . , 311, footnote 167). He adds that Mithraism was in part influential in
the change of Sunday from the second to the first day of the week (311,
footnote 167).
•
Strand asserts that Christians were too resistant to pagan influence for them to
adopt a pagan day of worship as a Christian day of worship. While
Bacchiocchi agrees that early Christians would rather die than give in to pagan
practices (Strand’s contention), he maintains that Christians would reject
pagan practice on one hand and adopt it on the other (cited in Jacquetta
Hawkes, Man and the Sun, pg. 199).
The assessment of Bacchiocchi’s responses is given in the following observations.
•
There is more to Strand’s argument about Mithraism than Bacchiocchi alludes
to. While Mithraism reached Rome at some point in the late first century AD,
Strand correctly asks, “But just how likely a source for adoption of Sunday
would Mithraism have provided to second-century Christians?” (Samuele
Bacchiocchi’s Reconstruction, 89).
Strand stresses the fact that Mithraism was a rival of Christianity as early as
the second century and would later be its main rival among pagan religions
(89). More importantly, Strand points out that Bacchiocchi originally names
only Mithraism as the source of pagan sun worship in ancient Rome (90,
footnote 6). Bacchiocchi responds to this observation in his later work by
conceding that other influences were responsible for the change of the sun-day
from the second to the first day of the week without referring to their identities
(Divine Rest. . . , 312, footnote 167). He then refers to a statement by
Tertullian (Ad Nationes 1:13; Ante-Nicene Fathers 3:123) where Tertullian
“attributes to the pagans in general (and not specifically to the Mithraists), the
responsibility for the advancement and preference of the day of the Sun over
that of Saturn” (312, footnote 167). What does this reveal? It is extremely
unlikely that Mithraism (in the late first to early second centuries) would
likely be a source “for the borrowing of Sunday by Christians in the early
second century” (Bacchiocchi’s Reconstruction, 90). The reason is quite
simple. Mithraism by itself could not exert such influence on Christians that
would make them compromise their faith by adopting a pagan day of worship
because it was not prominent enough in Rome to do so by the early second
century. Furthermore, Bacchiocchi’s reference to Tertullian given earlier
reflects commentary made in the late second century when Mithraism was
clearly of major influence in the Empire.
•
Bacchiocchi’s reference to Christian inconsistency in resisting pagan
encroachment into the church is well taken. However, the issue regards pagan
customs being wholeheartedly adopted into Christian dogma and practice as
opposed to referencing pagan images/representations as symbols of Christian
dogma and practice. It seems overwhelmingly apparent that the second
alternative was done and not the former. Strand rightly affirms, “And how
could Christianity so widely – in East as well as West – in a relatively short
time (or at such an early time) have been duped into accepting a purely pagan
practice?” (Bacchiocchi’s Reconstruction, 90; parenthetical comment my
own). Furthermore, Bacchiocchi again cites references from later Christian
history to support his criticism of Strand. As Strand perceptively asks, “But
was not the situation in the second century quite different” from that which
existed in the post-Constantinian Church (90-91)?
Conclusions
It is believed that Samuele Bacchiocchi fails to mount conclusive evidence to
support (1) the power of Roman ecclesiastical authority in the second century and (2) the
influence of pagan sun cults as proof for the wholesale adoption of the pagan Sunday as
the Christian day of worship.